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Featured researches published by I. Laros.


Molecular Ecology | 2015

Not all are free-living: high-throughput DNA metabarcoding reveals a diverse community of protists parasitizing soil metazoa

Stefan Geisen; I. Laros; A. Vizcaíno; Michael Bonkowski; G.A. de Groot

Protists, the most diverse eukaryotes, are largely considered to be free‐living bacterivores, but vast numbers of taxa are known to parasitize plants or animals. High‐throughput sequencing (HTS) approaches now commonly replace cultivation‐based approaches in studying soil protists, but insights into common biases associated with this method are limited to aquatic taxa and samples. We created a mock community of common free‐living soil protists (amoebae, flagellates, ciliates), extracted DNA and amplified it in the presence of metazoan DNA using 454 HTS. We aimed at evaluating whether HTS quantitatively reveals true relative abundances of soil protists and at investigating whether the expected protist community structure is altered by the co‐amplification of metazoan‐associated protist taxa. Indeed, HTS revealed fundamentally different protist communities from those expected. Ciliate sequences were highly over‐represented, while those of most amoebae and flagellates were under‐represented or totally absent. These results underpin the biases introduced by HTS that prevent reliable quantitative estimations of free‐living protist communities. Furthermore, we detected a wide range of nonadded protist taxa probably introduced along with metazoan DNA, which altered the protist community structure. Among those, 20 taxa most closely resembled parasitic, often pathogenic taxa. Therewith, we provide the first HTS data in support of classical observational studies that showed that potential protist parasites are hosted by soil metazoa. Taken together, profound differences in amplification success between protist taxa and an inevitable co‐extraction of protist taxa parasitizing soil metazoa obscure the true diversity of free‐living soil protist communities.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016

Molecular identification of soil eukaryotes and focused approaches targeting protist and faunal groups using high-throughput metabarcoding

G.A. de Groot; I. Laros; Stefan Geisen

While until recently the application of high-throughput sequencing approaches has mostly been restricted to bacteria and fungi, these methods have now also become available to less often studied (eukaryotic) groups, such as fauna and protists. Such approaches allow routine diversity screening for large numbers of samples via DNA metabarcoding. Given the enormous taxonomic diversity within the eukaryote tree of life, metabarcoding approaches targeting a single specific DNA region do not allow to discriminate members of all eukaryote clades at high taxonomic resolution. Here, we report on protocols that enable studying the diversity of soil eukaryotes and, at high taxonomic resolution, of individual faunal and protist groups therein using a tiered approach: first, the use of a general eukaryotic primer set targeting a wide range of eukaryotes provides a rough impression on the entire diversity of protists and faunal groups. Second, more focused approaches enable deciphering subsets of soil eukaryotes in higher taxonomic detail. We provide primers and protocols for two examples: soil microarthropods and cercozoan protists.


Ecological Indicators | 2018

The need for standardisation: Exemplified by a description of the diversity, community structure and ecological indices of soil nematodes

Bryan S. Griffiths; G.A. de Groot; I. Laros; D. Stone; Stefan Geisen


Book of Abstracts of the First Global Soil Biodiversity Conference | 2014

A tiered approach for high-resolution characterization of the soil faunal community via dna metabarcoding

G.A. de Groot; Stefan Geisen; I. Laros; J.H. Faber; R. Schmeltz


Archive | 2016

Herkomst en migratie van Nederlandse edelherten en wilde zwijnen

de G.A. Groot; G.J. Spek; J. Bovenschen; I. Laros; van Tom Meel; H.A.H. Jansman


Archive | 2016

Herkomst en migratie van Nederlandse edelherten en wilde zwijnen : een basiskaart van de genetische patronen in Nederland en omgeving

G.A. de Groot; G.J. Spek; J. Bovenschen; I. Laros; Tom van Meel; H.A.H. Jansman


Archive | 2016

Weather-dependent community shiftsin the aerobiome: measuring airborne dispersal of plants, mesofauna and microbes simultaneously via DNA metabarcoding

G.A. de Groot; Stefan Geisen; E.R.J. Wubs; I. Laros; Liz Meulenbroek; A.T. Kuiters; P.A. Slim


Archive | 2014

Inteelt onder Sallandse korhoenders : de genetische gevolgen van een kleine populatieomvang

G.A. de Groot; H.A.H. Jansman; J. Bovenschen; I. Laros; Y. Meyer-Lucht; J. Hoglund


Landschap : tijdschrift voor Landschapsecologie en Milieukunde | 2014

Aquatische exoten vroeg detecteren via eDNA : case study rivierkreeften

G.A. de Groot; I. Laros; F.G.W.A. Ottburg; J.G.J. Roesink


Vakblad Natuur Bos Landschap | 2013

Genetische tools voor natuurbeheer: van het lab naar de praktijk

G.A. de Groot; I. Laros

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G.A. de Groot

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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H.A.H. Jansman

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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J. Bovenschen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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H.P. Koelewijn

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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J.H. Faber

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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A.T. Kuiters

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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P.A. Slim

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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W.J. Dimmers

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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